2018 Mid-Term Elections: VOTE!! It’s about your Future
Choosing the direction our Congress, our Maryland Executive (governor), Legislature and our local governments will take, is up to us. The Eastern Shore Primary turnout this past June was very low. In fact, in the nine counties that make up the Eastern Shore, most registered voters did not vote to indicate their preferred candidate for their party. We can’t really complain about the choice of candidates if we don’t take the time to help chose them in the Primary. Talbot County had the highest voter turnout for the Primary at just under 36%. Kent County came in second with just over 35% of registered voters. In Caroline County, 29% voted in the June 26 Primary. The lowest turnouts were in Queen Anne with 23%, Cecil at 20% and Wicomico at a mere 17% of eligible voters.
The registration statistics also show that the vast majority of new voter registrations are being generated through the state’s Motor Vehicle Administration. In January 2018, Republicans comprised 42.1% of the total number of registered voters, compared to 38.0% of Democrats. Another 1.5% were registered with other parties and 18.4% had no declared party affiliation. By August, with the addition of 2,496 additional registrations, Republicans had increased their share of the total to 42.4% while the Democratic share had decreased by the same percentage to 37.7%. The proportion of other party and unaffiliated voters remained essentially constant.
All nine counties have—to varying degrees—similar problems and they look to all levels of government to help alleviate these problems such as public school funding; rural health care; infrastructure, including public transportation, roads and bridges; communications, for example, fiber optics; and the American scourge of opioid addiction.
If we want a functioning representative democracy, we, the “demos” (people) must participate. If the majority of voters opt out, then we’ve got something much less than democracy, something more authoritarian where it's the majority of a minority that gets to decide what happens in the coming years. However, on an encouraging note, while Primary voting was very low, so far, Early Voting in October is running high which is a good indicator that turnout on the actual Election Day, Nov. 6, will probably be high, too.
Find out where the candidates stand on the issues you care about and VOTE ACCORDINGLY.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




